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Overview of FEMA’s Risk MAP Program & Taming the Terrain Beast

Overview of FEMA’s Risk MAP Program & Taming the Terrain Beast. Arc Hydro River Workshop Gray Minton & Andy Bonner, AECOM. December 2, 2010. Agenda. FEMA’s Risk MAP Program Watershed vs. Countywide New Risk MAP Datasets & Products FEMA’s Elevation Strategy Taming the Terrain Beast

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Overview of FEMA’s Risk MAP Program & Taming the Terrain Beast

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  1. Overview of FEMA’s Risk MAP Program & Taming the Terrain Beast Arc Hydro River Workshop Gray Minton & Andy Bonner, AECOM December 2, 2010

  2. Agenda • FEMA’s Risk MAP Program • Watershed vs. Countywide • New Risk MAP Datasets & Products • FEMA’s Elevation Strategy • Taming the Terrain Beast • Challenges and Custom Solutions • The Virtual Office • Q&A Arc Hydro River Workshop

  3. FEMA’s Risk MAP Program

  4. Countywide Studies • Jurisdictionally-based County 2 County 1 New/Updated Studies County 3 County 5 County 4

  5. Watershed Studies • Not limited by corporate limits anymore County 2 New/Updated Studies County 1 County 3 County 5 County 4

  6. Flood Risk Products & Datasets

  7. Program Product Comparisons Non-Regulatory Products Traditional Regulatory Products DFIRM Database Traditional products are regulatory and subject to statutory due-process requirements Risk MAP products are non-regulatory and are not subject to statutory due-process requirements

  8. Flood Risk Datasets Changes Since Last FIRM Flood Depth & Analysis Grids Flood Risk Assessment Data Areas of Mitigation Interest (Enhanced)

  9. Flood Depth & Analysis Grids • Summary Table of Grids () vs. Enhanced Grids () * Note that the delivery of water surface elevation grids is an enhancement

  10. Flood Depth Grids • Definition • Digital dataset showing the flood depth at various location within the floodplain • Purpose • Communication of flood hazard in terms of depth (i.e. 4 feet of water means more to most people than a Base Flood Elevation of 734’) • Key Input into Flood Risk Assessment tools (e.g. HAZUS, etc.) Source: USACE, Economic Guidance Memo #04-01, October 2003

  11. Flood Depth Grid Development • Terrain Developed and Cross-Sections Placed XS XS

  12. Flood Depth Grid Development • Hydraulic Models Created XS XS

  13. Flood Depth Grid Development • Water Surface Elevations (WSE) Calculated and WSE Grid Produced XS XS WSE

  14. Flood Depth Grid Development • Depth Grid Calculated as Difference between WSE and Ground XS XS Depth

  15. Flood Depth & Analysis Grids • Awareness when using at specific buildings/structures Finished FloorElevation

  16. Percent Chance of Flooding Grids • Definition • Digital datasets showing the percent chance of flooding at various locations within the mapped floodplain • Purpose • Communication that the likelihood of flooding for someone living within the mapped floodplain may actually be higher than a “1% annual chance”, and that the flood hazard (and by extension, risk) varies within the mapped floodplain

  17. 10% Depth (10-Year) 1.5 ft 1% Annual Chance Floodplain Boundary 0.0 ft 0.0 ft

  18. 4% Depth (25-Year) 2.8 ft 0.0 ft 0.0 ft

  19. 2% Depth (50-Year) 3.8 ft 0.0 ft 0.0 ft

  20. 1% Depth (100-Year) 4.7 ft 0.0 ft 0.1 ft

  21. 0.2% Depth (500-Year) 8.9 ft 1.7 ft 4.3 ft

  22. Percent Annual Chance of Flooding 10% + 0.4% 1%

  23. Percent Chance of Flooding over a 30-yr Period 96% + 11% 26%

  24. Elevation Data Acquisition

  25. Risk MAP Elevation Data Strategy • Program plan is to spend $20M annually • Reuse existing LiDAR where available • Stratify requirements by risk and terrain • Only the very flattest areas will require very high accuracy • Most of the need will be medium or low accuracy LiDAR (relative to typical LiDAR standards) • Very lowest risk areas might use existing data • Cost share for overall collection and initial processing • Cost share separately for targeted post-processing of floodplain areas

  26. Taming the Terrain Beast • LiDAR is great, but… • More points = more data to store • More points = more data to process • Point spacing keeps getting closer and no end is in sight Arc Hydro River Workshop

  27. Internal lessons learned: • Custom tool development: • We developed the core of our existing terrain solution around 1997 for a countywide non-LiDAR study. • Since then, the tool has evolved to handle LiDAR studies ranging in size from a small watershed to an entire state (or larger if needed). • Virtual office: • Our staff is dispersed over many states, and need access to the same data at the same time. • We have been using CITRIX for all data access and processing. Arc Hydro River Workshop

  28. The Virtual Office: The cloud before the cloud was cool? • Citrix Application Servers create a “Virtual Office” environment that allows for 24/7 access to production data from anywhere in the world. • Coupled with Geodatabase = Powerful Production • Data, Storage, Processing & Licensing Centralization • Basically, an internal cloud CITRIX Application Servers ArcSDE Server Arc Hydro River Workshop

  29. Custom Tool Development • WISE Terrain Analyst: • Was not originally planned; was developed out of necessity due to magnitude of project topographic data • Extremely scalable • Multi-user access to data through one access point • Rapid access to all data regardless of study size • Custom additions for versioning, data prioritization, hydrocorrection, etc. • Foundation for all tools Arc Hydro River Workshop December 2, 2010

  30. WISE currently stores complete TIN and DEMs from LIDAR for the entire state of North Carolina in one seamless project (50,000 square miles, billions of points) Arc Hydro River Workshop

  31. Ideas to take away for Arc Hydro River: • Talk to agencies who warehouse data early, take advantage of existing efforts, and incorporate standardized hooks into future data models for easier retrieval Arc Hydro River Workshop

  32. Ideas to take away for Arc Hydro River: • Design needs to be scalable • Users expect rapid access to data and fast calculations, so pre-process/cache any data that may be needed more than once • Design tools for both simple and advanced users • Stock up on storage space!! Arc Hydro River Workshop

  33. Q&A? Andy Bonner Gray Minton

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